Two performance lectures at The Writers’ Room, London

Last night I got to hear two incredible performance lectures from D Mortimer and Leo Bussi. In the first, Mortimer talked about influence, whirligig methodology, spiral dances, decomposition, disturbance and Genet’s play Deathwatch, while periodically strumming an electric guitar. It was virtuosic! In the second, Leo talked about his love for Jeff Koons’ Hulk (Friends) by telling the story of his falling for Koons after poring over art books in the GSA library and celebrating his work’s ‘real-fake performance’ and ‘sentimental horseshit’. We looked at ‘paintings which actualised what [Leo] hoped [his] work would do’, a version of abundance felt as emptiness, Andrea Long Chu’s definition of desire, metaphors of puncture, fantasies of ‘masculinity interrupted by attachment’, gender as citation, strength as atmospheric. He had the audience blow up a number of inflatables – champagne bottle, dolphin, yasssified horsie, parrot, frog, elephant, saxophone, caveman club, airplane, flamingo, duck – then strap each one to his body with duct tape. A great deal of ripping and balancing was felt and heard. He crawled to a hole in the floor to see what was underneath as I passed him the microphone, saying ekphrasis might be experienced ‘as the holes in the residency’s floor’. But just as the beach might not always be locatable beneath the paving stones, abundance isn’t always found under the residency’s floor – Leo said something like what he had seen down there was something of a disappointment. One thinks of a sort of virtual ekphrasis. For ekphrasis was in the air, a humming poem-to-come, even if the found objects could not be conjured to satisfaction. Other things I thought about: inflation and the economy, ecological readings of species coexistence on the human body (Hulk ecologies??), Leo as the angel of inflatables (in a sort of Antony Gormley, statuesque way), steroid bod as empty calorie capitalism, cuteness and kitsch as dramaturgies of gender, the politics of anthropomorphism. Leo concluded by reflecting on how we are more interested in looking at each other, in talking about art, than we often are in the art itself. And how that can be very specific, historical and contextual. In some sense performing his art object of choice, via a process of collage and becoming-object, Leo made us really look at how we look.

This event took place at The Writers’ Room in London. Check out what they are doing here.

(Unfortunately in the first half of the event I was too sun-dazed to take a picture.)

The Indigo Hours Launch (Glasgow)

Event poster for 'The Indigo Hours' book launch featuring Leo Bussi and Maria Sledmere, with artistic illustrations of arches and clouds. Includes event details: date, time, and location in Glasgow.

Glasgow friends! November is a busy month. See you there. I’m excited to be in conversation with the legendary Leo Bussi. Format is: readings from both of us (POETRY+PROSE) then a conversation and Q&A. Topics to discuss may include art & music writing, ambient literature, auto-theory/fiction, homage, love, everydayness, plotting the situationship and more. Books will be available from both authors.

Starts at 6:30pm sharpish. Venue: A_Place Gallery on Bath Street. Full details on the eventbrite:

Leo Bussi, Life-Sized

For a few months now I’ve been working as lead editor on Leo Bussi’s debut pamphlet, Life-Sized. I just wanted to say a quick word here about how awesome that’s been. I felt pretty jaded about running a press for a while because I was holistically exhausted and sick of the admin oblivion that is a non-profit tax return. This project has got me back in the game.

Leo’s work has charmed me ever since he read at the SPAM launch of Cocoa and Nothing (listen here) and we bonded over shared appreciation for a certain universally loathed, candy-named song. Editing Life-Sized has been energising because Leo is someone who kind of just comes with a fully formed poetic. And that’s informed by art and conversation and what Sue Tompkins calls ‘muscular sculpture’ and what Oli Hazzard calls ‘gorgeously goofy bathos’. He really has an ear for a line break which is sometimes comic timing and sometimes it’s object erotics and sometimes it’s the trompe l’oeil of the poem’s own jouissance. The poem feeling itself in cereal or nightfall or some kind of membrane.

AI-generated visual absurdism may have diluted the power of surrealism in culture but Leo’s poetry reaffirms the sharp gasp of the paranoiac-critical method. Here we have fused realities and toy scales – ‘Barbie version of Mount Rushmore’– played out in the synaesthetic poetics of a Jeff Koons expanded universe. If this is lyric then it’s also ‘Art-breath’ and everything might be desire but it’s also the agency of the brush and a line might be a gentle brush with erosion or it might be social realism i.e. ‘cucked and living in Britain’. My autocorrect tries to make cucked sucked and I want to tell my computer, you should be so lucky.

We are launching Leo’s book at Good Press on 20th March. It’s at 6:30pm, free and you can just show up.

You can preorder Life-Sized here

You can also get in touch with SPAM Press if you would like to review the pamphlet!